bilateral use of the gore ibe device for bilateral cia ... · • internal iliac limb patency 95.1%...
TRANSCRIPT
Bilateral use of the Gore IBE device for bilateral CIA aneurysms and a first interim analysis of the prospective Iceberg registry
Michel MPJ Reijnen, MD, PhD
Department of Vascular Surgery, Rijnstate Hospital Arnhem
Technical Medical Centre, University of Twente, Enschede
The Netherlands
Disclosures
Consultancy and/or Research Funding:
• Medtronic
• Bentley InnoMed GmbH
• Terumo Aortic
• Endologix Inc.
• W.L. Gore and associates
• Vascular Insights LLC
Common iliac artery aneurysms
• CIA aneurysms mostly present in conjunction with an AAA and are often bilateral
• Patients with CIA aneurysms have been related to more type Ib endoleaks, secondary interventions and ruptures
• Coil and coverage strategy is related to ischemic complications, including buttock claudication and erectile dysfunction
• Applicability of bell-bottom limbs is limited and seems to be related to late complications
Cook® Zenith® Branch Iliac Endovascular Graft
• First branched endoprosthesis for the treatment of common iliac aneurysm s (CE mark October 2006)
• 20 Fr introducer sheath
• Single component – no dedicated internal iliac component
• Requires additional covered stent (Other platform, mostly balloon expandable)
Gore Excluder Iliac Branch Endoprosthesis
• CE mark November 2013
• Used in conjunction with the Excluder endoprosthesis
• 16 Fr introducer sheath
• Option for repositioning
• SE Iliac component based on the same platform
Iliac Branched Devices
GORE® EXCLUDER® Iliac BranchEndoprosthesis
IDE trial – 6 month primary endpoint (n=63)• 95.2% technical success
• 0% aneurysm related mortality
• Internal iliac limb patency 95.1%
• Re-intervention rate 1.6%
• 0 type 1 or 3 endoleaks
Dutch experience – mean FU of 6 months (n=46)• 93.5% Technical success
• 0% aneurysm related mortality
• Internal iliac limb patency 94.0%
• Reintervention rate 7% (n=2)
• 1 type 1b endoleak
Schneider DB, et al. J Vasc Surg. 2017 Sep;66(3):775-785.
Van Sterkenburg SM, et al. J Vasc Surg. 2016 Jun;63(6):1451-7.
ICEBERG Registry• Prospective multi-centre, observational, post-market, real-world
registry
• 101 included patients in 8 international sites
• Inclusion ended in 2018
• Follow-up scheduled to 5 years
Inclusion criteria• Age 18 years or older
• Written informed consent
• Elective procedure
• Indication for aorto-iliac endovascular stent graft repair
Exclusion criteria• Life expectancy <2 years• Psychiatric or other condition that may
interfere with the study• Allergy to any device component• Systemic infection• Coagulopathy or uncontrolled bleeding
disorder• Acute or mycotic aneurysm• CVA or MI within the prior three months• Pregnancy• Other stents placed in CIA or hypogastric
arteries than the Gore® EXCLUDER® Iliac branch Endoprothesis
Age (years) 70.0 (IQR 65.0-75.0)
Male gender 98 (97%)
BMI (kg/m2) 26.0 (IQR 24.1-28.7)
Hypertension 67 (66%)
Diabetes mellitus 11 (11%)
Hyperlididemia 61 (60%)
Current smoking 28 (28%)
Cardiac disease 28 (28%)
Renal impairment 14 (14%)
Pulmonary disease 26 (26%)
Buttock claudication 6 (6%)
Erectile dysfunction 14 (14%)
AAA present 69 (68%)
AAA present >50mm 32 (32%)
CIA aneurysm 96 (95%)
Left 17 (17%)
Right 34 (34%)
bilateral 45 (44%)
IIA aneurysm 16 (16%)
Other concomitant aneurysm 18 (18%)
Previous EVAR 2 (2%)
Iceberg registryBaseline characteristics
Interim analysis; data are subjected to changes
Aortic proximal neck diameter (mm) 23 (IQR 21-25)
Aortic neck length (mm) 29 (IQR 20-38)
AAA diameter (mm) (when applicable) 50 (IQR 40-61)
Diameter above aortic bifurcation (mm) 30 (IQR 24-39)
Right CIA diameter; max.(mm) 35 (IQR 24-42)
Left CIA diameter; max.(mm) 28 (IQR 21-37)
Max. diameter IBE treated CIA (mm) 35 (IQR 30-42)
Right IIA landing zone diameter (mm) 9 (IQR 8-11)
Right IIA landing zone length (mm) 30 (IQR 20-40)
Left IIA landing zone diameter (mm) 10 (IQR 9-11)
Left IIA landing zone length (mm) 30 (IQR 20-35)
Iceberg registryBaseline characteristics
Interim analysis; data are subjected to changes
• Bilateral IBE in 20 cases and isolated IBE in 5 cases
• Procedural time 152 min (IQR 117-193 min)
• Contrast 130 mL (IQR 100-180 mL)
• Contralateral IIA• Patent and not overstented N=61
• Second IBE N=20
• Patent and overstented N=13
• Not patent before procedure N=5
Iceberg registryProcedural data
Interim analysis; data are subjected to changes
• Procedural complications• Bleeding IIA; embolization and overstenting
• Dislodgement of bridging stent; additional stent
• Partial coverage of a renal artery; stenting of renal artery
• Failure of closure device
• Endoleaks at completion angiography• Ia N=1
• Ib N=0
• II N=15
• III N=0
Iceberg registryProcedural data
Interim analysis; data are subjected to changes
• Hospitalization 4 (IQR 3-5) days
• Serious adverse events N=9 with 1 re-intervention: angioplasty of stenosis iliac bifurcation
• Endoleaks Ia N=1
Ib N=0
II N=16
III N=0
• 4 early occlusions of hypogastric branch
• No 30-day mortality
Iceberg registry30-day outcome
Interim analysis; data are subjected to changes
Iceberg registryClinical outcome
Interim analysis; data are subjected to changes
00
20
40
60
80
100
Baseline 1 month
WIQ distance
WIQ speed
WIQ stairs
WIQ total score
00%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
Baseline
1 month
Walking Impairment Questionnaire
P=0.148
EQ5D percentage of patients that reported no problems
• Meta-analysis of 1084 patients in 22 studies; 5 devices
• Follow-up ranged between 1 and 44 months
• Patency 86% (95%CI; 84-88%)– IIA occlusion; 27 patients
– EIA occlusion; 23 patients
• IBD related reintervention rate 11% (95%CI; 8-14)
• Buttock claudication in 6% (95%CI; 5-8%)
• Erectile dysfunction in 2 patients
The main reason of buttock claudication was contralateral embolization of the IIA
• 47 patients, aged 68 ± 9 years
• IRB approved retrospective review
• Bilateral Gore IBE implanted;
• In US post-FDA approval (2/2016)
• In Europe post-CE mark (11/2013)
• Demographics, anatomic characteristics and procedural details
• Mean follow-up 6.5 months (range 1-36)
(9.8min fluoro, ∆24.3%, p=0.004)
(44.6 min procedure, ∆29.1%, p<0.001)
(26cc contrast, ∆22%, p=0.032)
Results; procedural details
• Technical Success (98%)
– One technical failure: failure to access tight IIA
• No procedural type I or III endoleaks
• Adjunctive stenting was required in 4 patients at time of index procedure
• Distal IIA dissection (n=1)
• Kinking (n=3)
Results; procedural details
Results at latest follow-upMean 6.5months, range 1-36 months
• Two deaths, both not AAA-related• New Buttock Claudication : 1/47 patients (2.1%) • Radiographic imaging available for 40/47 patients
• Type 1/3 endoleak n=0• Migration n=0• Sac enlargement n=0• EIA occlusion n=3• IIA occlusion n=2
Results at latest follow-upMean 6.5months, range 1-36 months
• Two deaths, both not AAA-related• New Buttock Claudication : 1/47 patients (2.1%) • Radiographic imaging available for 40/47 patients
• Type 1/3 endoleak n=0• Migration n=0• Sac enlargement n=0• EIA occlusion n=3• IIA occlusion n=2
Preservation of bilateral IIAs in repair of bilateral CI aneurysms can be performed safely with excellent technical success and short term patency
Summary
• IIA preservation is indicated when treating common iliac artery aneurysms, especially in young patients
• The prospective ICEBERG registry shows a favorable early outcome of the GORE IBE device but 1-year outcome needs to be awaited
• When technically feasible a bilateral preservation of the IIA should be considered and can be performed safely
Bilateral use of the Gore IBE device for bilateral CIA aneurysms and a first interim analysis of the prospective Iceberg registry
Michel MPJ Reijnen, MD, PhD
Department of Vascular Surgery, Rijnstate Hospital Arnhem
Technical Medical Centre, University of Twente, Enschede
The Netherlands